January 6, 2009 at 9:52 am (Death, Family, Funeral, Grief, Growing Up, Human Experience, Loss, Mourning, letting go)
Do we live in a moment that happens before us, spread wide like a vacant lot? Do we sputter with weeds and broken glass, laughing at the blood that flecks upon our naked feet? Do we live there, draped in a forever that smells of stale beer and smoke? Or do we pass it by, looking for a pretty object to rest our eyes upon, looking for eternity behind glass and mortar? As we live, we write our history upon each awkward step, backwards glance and gasp of hesitation.
I lie near her, holding my hand against her chest. It quivers beneath my fingers, clutching to the life that lingers there. Each breath, a frightening conquest, a small victory… She is far from me yet I stay by the doorway, watching her leave me behind. Her eyes are wide in knowing. I must let her go. To love is to let go. But I hold on and plead with her, “One more day… just one more day,”
Blood spattered across the tile, marked with bits of skull and brain like shrapnel of an ugly war. I don’t remember the gun but I recall how neatly his hands lay at his sides, how soft his naked chest lay, and the belt looped through his jeans and the casual flop of his feet as if asleep. My father showed me this photograph and my eyes became wide in knowing. So this is what death looks like… We are broken pieces that spill across the floor, faceless and ugly. I asked him to show me more. It became a novelty, a game to which I could never succumb to for I was a sweet girl, and the gun does not blow the brains out of sweet girls.
The coffin lay miles before me, each step sinking into the carpet. I swam amidst grief until I came across the specter, dressed in white. His hands were neatly folded at his sides. Makeup caked his skin in a mockery of life, hiding the scars that lay beneath. The crowd gathered before him in reverence and curiosity. The wolf had struck one of their own, killing the helpless creature and leaving the specter in its wake, a reminder that it continues to stalk. As they mourn, I turn my head, eyes wide in knowing. Is it there, I wonder, looking at me? The gun does not scare me but the wolf salivates in wanton indiscretion to devour a sweet girl. I cannot play this game anymore.
Sweetness grows sour in the eye of knowing and I quiver on the vine, frightened of the fall if I should rot. She looks to me, ready to leap. “No,” I plead, “Just one more day…” I reach for her but she turns away from me. She does not ask for guns or wolves but only my love. How did my love become a killer?
His face was full of fragile sweetness, freckled and dark. It took one bullet and his face spilled onto his sheets, remnants of an ugly war. Fragments of his family littered the battlefield. My hands were clumsy, picking up a piece here and there, giving them up as an offering to please the wolves at the door. Why do they come so close? Why do these tears not satisfy their appetites? Why do they lick the feet of these mourners, hungrily eyeing their throats? I see his face in every reflection, every pause. I see it in my own. To love him was to watch him die.
My hand lingers upon her chest, keeping time with her uneven beat. She cannot appease me instead she can only give me visions of a forgotten history. She can only pin me to a moment. I must let it go.
Oh but please… one more day…
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July 27, 2008 at 7:33 am (Alone, Creative Writing, Devotion, Emotions, Friend, Helplessness, Human Experience, Loss, Love, Relationships, Unrequited Love, Unresolved emotions, Writing, letting go, moving on)
He comes at me like a knife, slicing through me with tenderness. He looks to me as he cuts me down, a beauty in his eyes. We hold each other up, both at the end of the blade. If I could back the poison and rub the memory away, I would. If I could speak freely again to a man I once called a friend, a greater title than all others. Yet he turns from me, shielding him from my awkward advances. He hides in the shadows as if ashamed of his own face. Invisible enemies scratch at his feet. They must howl terribly as he holds his ears away from their incessant accusations. The distance grows greater with each breath, each tentative heartbeat. If I could find him across the bloated chasm, I would leap across the shadows and take him from his own mind, cast away the demons that threaten my friend. If I could find him, I would follow him into his own Hell. Yet he escapes my devotion, masking his presence with curt explanation and dismissal. Like mercury, he slips through my fingers if I hold on to tightly and yet I keep trying. Chasing after tiny red beads tumbling at my feet… I’ve wasted so many words, so many metaphors in hope that he will come back to me as he was. I’ve called to him blindly in the night, hoping he will hear. Yet as the stars oversee us, they are silent in my effort. They blink back in dumb protest to my madness. Could some higher power not convey the message that I care, that I will not go away? That no matter how deep the cut is I will always keep looking to him. No love letter could be as true as this.
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February 6, 2008 at 2:08 am (Bereaved, Brother, Brother-in-law, Death, Family, Friend, Funeral, Grief, Helplessness, Human Experience, Iowa, Loss, Love, Mourning, Murder, Relationships, Relatives, Son, Speculation, Suspicion)
In every funeral, a row of casseroles and creamy desserts adorn the table in quiet reverie. They will their gooey bodies to the mouths of the grieving in vain hope of filling the void. Eventually the carcasses are piled high in aluminum caskets and given away. They sit patiently in the fridge, occasionally nibbled and quickly forgotten. In my small existence, I know this to be true.
In every funeral, flowers sprout from every hand and given to those whose hands can sprout nothing but smudges of their tears. Glossy and green, they promise renewal, rebirth but only remind one of the loss that comes from starting over. Soon they, too, wither and die, revealing the emptiness of their motives. The empty shells pile high in plastic bags until they, too, are forgotten. In my small existence, I know this to be true.
The predictable mechanics of the funeral, however, do not orchestrate the procession of grief. A shadowy haze that descends upon the ones left behind encloses the circle of mourners. None can penetrate the ancient rites of sorrow. One can only witness. One can only listen.
Recently, my friend lost her brother-in-law in a gruesome and unnecessary way. Under a cloud of suspicion, the family mourns in unknowing. Every head hangs low, searching for their lost brother, son and friend. Some dissolve into the stillness of their mind while others find more desperate acts. All the chairs may be filled yet the room remains empty. Eyes turn to the spot where he should be and remain startled by his stark absence.
The wife, a predictable center of grief, has vanished before their eyes. Rumors of her involvement are enough to keep her distant. She behaves like a cruel stranger, feeding the whispers that lurk in dark corners. The rage is hungry and stalks at the footsteps of the bereaved. To be taken by God is Natural Law but to be fallen by false love is an abomination. Yet one can only wait for the slow hand of Justice, and hope to find a fragment of what they lost in the result.
It reads like a story, a newspaper headline, yet it is here, right before my eyes. The characters are flesh and their words unscripted. The haze hangs in the air, its frenzied particles rubbing off on well-wishers. No one can argue of their sorrow. No one can steal their melancholy. Time may fade the scars but never will it heal. In grief, one learns to live every day with loss; a specter and friend. Never do they “get over it” like a middle school crush or sucking one’s thumb. Even as the casseroles are eaten and the flowers have wilted, a chair will always be empty. The room will always be quieter. In my small existence, I know this to be true.
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February 5, 2008 at 4:58 am (Death, Family, Fear, Grief, Human Experience, Love, Mourning, Personal Failure, Personal Responsibility, Revelation, Sacrifice, Self-Discovery, Trauma)
You are not here…
You are not here…
Each footstep is that of a ghost who resides in your body…
You are not here…
The mantra does not stick. Like the weather, it is fickle and laughs at such attempts to change one’s existence through words. You are here. And nothing can keep you from it.
She was a thousand miles away from me. The cigarette in her hand trembled like a butterfly caught in a jar. Ashes fell in a flurry of panic and sorrow. Her eyes wandered through me, searching for someone else. Her limbs had become undone, quivering under the weight of a single phone call. In the same room, I stood as a witness. “No, no, no, no,” she said, unable to quiet the storm. “This isn’t about me,” she continued, repeating her mantra. “This isn’t about me…”
“This isn’t about me…”
“This isn’t about me…”
I stood as a witness to her breakdown. I was a thousand miles away. My hands fell awkwardly at my side. I wanted to touch her, to make her real again. I wanted her close, to bring her back to me. My friend, always looking down for fear of heights… Yet I could not bring myself to touch her. My friend, who depends on nothing… She folds her laundry like a ritual in which only she knows the rites to. She holds the madness in one’s eyes still, tying them back down to the earth. She sacrifices herself upon the alter of her home with gladness and sorrow. Even as the pieces fell from her broken frame, she would turn away from me. I could only witness.
“I can handle this,” she said.
“I can handle this…”
“I can handle this…”
Her face has drained of color. I think of my grandfather. As he died, I could not touch him. I could not bring myself to feel death upon the paper-thin shell. My heart leapt from my chest as I watched him breathing. I wanted to hold each breath; to hold each beat of his heart. Yet I could not. I see her, fading from me. The air becomes tight within my throat. I will lose her too.
“No…”
“No…”
“No…”
“This can’t be happening…”
I step forward, awkward and strange yet I continue, reaching into the abyss to find her. Her body responds to warmth, searching for harbor in the seas of her own mind. She curls into me, resting her head on my shoulder. I keep her close, for fear of her drowning. “Take a minute” I say, for both of us. Words begin to rest their excitable wings. She is close again. I hold each breath, each heartbeat until she can come back again. I will not lose her too.
I am here…
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January 18, 2008 at 4:33 am (Adjustment, Adulthood, Alone, Attempting Balance, Beginnings, Creative Writing, Depression, Dreams, Emotions, Faith, Fear, Finding One's Own Light, God, Growing Up, Happiness, Hate, Helplessness, Hope, Human Experience, Loneliness, Love, Moon, Prayer, Revelation, Self love, Self-Discovery, Sun, The Fool, The Fool's Journey, Writer's Block, Writing, letting go, moving on)
Tags: being alone, butterflies, emptiness, feeling, Love, madness, numb, Ouroboros, Self love, stillness, vultures
When one is alone, the mind begins to eat itself from the inside out. Like the eternal Ouroboros, there is no beginning or end to the shallow pool of thoughts. The waters become still, muddy and confused. Relief comes in sleep, where only dreams can haunt. Yet morning comes like an onslaught. Nothing can defend you from the sun. It comes, forcing its light into you, invading the stillness of the stars until nothing else can be seen.
I was filled and yet empty. Unable to let go and yet I held onto nothing. Overwhelmed by the weight of my feeling and yet I was numb. Words fluttered like butterflies, always out of reach. Like a child, I clumsily chased their meaning in hope to find God encrusted on their wings. My touch could never grace the dust of their flight. Yet my feet could never be still. Like the girl and the red shoes, the dance was endless and it was only a matter of time before I grew weary.
To be alone, one must find stillness or be eaten alive. Four walls grow large with only your small spirit to hold like a caged bird. Sound is muffled by the silence. Hallways become endless mazes in which no end appears. When you are alone, you are left with only yourself for company. It’s wise to enjoy your reflection as it beats back at you. For enemies within your own mind become the shadows around every corner, the whisper in every room. The nightmares one leaves behind, skulk against the wall with no place to hide. Everything one is afraid of becomes a constant visitor at the door.
There is no place to hide. Butterflies become vultures, picking at my resolve. Left with hunger, they are restless. Yet I am all that is left. Bits of feathers stick to the blood as it warms in the sun. The bones are white, clean. I stare into the heavens as the sky clears. The storm is over. The clouds are gone and the light reveals the empty husk. I had been fooled into believing there was more. I had been fooled that I contained myth, magic, or mystery. Without the temperamental heart, I am empty secrets. I do not fear my own shadow. I am afraid of my own light.
When one is alone, they see only themselves. Faces distort until all are merely figments of one’s own psyche. Wars are waged against the invisible enemies. Landscapes change to suit one’s mood. The world becomes centered in one’s own loneliness. The sun beams brighter if the day is good. The rain sings a lullaby when one wishes to sleep. The snow stifles the feeling, when one wants to remain numb. The universal design is centered within you. Yet as the stars align their arrows against you, you can see the strings holding them up in the sky. You can see the seams lining the costumes of your many players. The cracks begin to show. You see the set for what it really is. You are a fraud, bent on reenacting your death. You are unable to let go of the wicked witches, the enchanted forests, the charming princes. There would be nothing left to warrant letting go.
The blood flakes off the bone. The wind picks up dried skin and hair. I am embedded in dirt. I remain as if waiting. My sockets gaze upwards to the sky as if I had never seen the sun. The moon is more familiar, her lucid madness dancing among the stars. Naked and strange, she howls with a smile and laughs as she bleeds. Her eyes appear as if asleep yet she is restless. Often she would creep into my room and steal me away. She revealed to me the many shades of black and taught me to scream as I cried to stifle the quiet. No one could shield themselves from her sorrow, her love, her madness. She whispered her secrets to me only to have me forget upon waking. Yes, I knew the moon. It was the sun that was a stranger. His quiet indifference confused me. I have often closed my eyes against him and yet his colors would become swollen under my lids. He made my heart race against its will until it leapt away from me. Yet he would not claim to love me. I could only guess.
To be alone, one cannot lie undetected. One cannot hide their secrets. Treasured photographs, veiled instability and clandestine shame are scattered amongst the dinner conversation. Each guest has a voice that cannot be stifled. Even the rattling of knives cannot distract from the pretenders. The game is undone before it starts. The seams are undone and the makeup was worn away. All that is left is a husk of rot and decay. All that is left is a choice. Can something grow from dirt? Can something grow from you? Or is it better to sink into the earth and let the world forget you? When you turn away from the world, it never stops watching you fall. You can hold your head and cry in the quiet of your room. You can scream to God inside the safe walls of your car. But you are alone. Desperation goes unnoticed and only you can save yourself.
I have seen faces in the candlelight, lit with myth and magic. I have loved by the light of the street lamps. I have seen God by the flickering votives. Love is simple when kept in secret. Yet by day, I am blind. With the sun in my eyes, I cannot see love yet it can see me. It sings in the wind even though I cannot hear it. Words like butterflies cling to bone. Wings like stained glass drape over the empty sockets to dry in the sun. The world, for a moment, is beyond me, unconstructed and strange. The ground becomes fluid beneath me, flooding the empty cavern of my mind, unearthing the shell from its grave. A thousand wings take flight. I am falling or perhaps I am rising. Yet all that I am certain of is that I can still see the sky and it is looking back.
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January 13, 2008 at 9:02 pm (Adjustment, Adulthood, Artistic Apathy, Attempting Balance, Beginnings, Creative Writing, Disillusion, Displacement, Emotions, Fear, Growing Up, Hope, Human Experience, Iowa, Leaving Home, New Life, Starting Over, The Fool, The Fool's Journey, Writing, letting go, moving on)
Words trickle from their earthy berths, exciting the sleepy soil that has long grown cold. The quiet stream is soundless against the roaring calm of the grave. The ground is numb to touch, unable to feel. Winter has stifled the infant spring, mollifying its cries with its icy grasp. Yet the words continue to come, babbling like a child practicing its vowels. “Ma-ma-ma” it coos, rolling its tongue along the lines of ancient divinity.
The silence is a deadly enemy. Like winter it falls with beauty yet strangles the life from fragile. As I indulged in the inky emotions that colored the fairytale of my past, I find the words come like spring. They burst from colorful blooms and fragrant winds. Like a child, I paint my mythology along the walls of my present. I show my art to all who will see and wait for them to pat my head. My fragility comes from a youth that cannot be killed. It cries, it laughs and asserts its innocence in every line. Yet spring cannot dominant all seasons. The wind grows cold and the ground throttles the new buds. The laughter is still and I am no longer at home but in the midst of a storm.
Iowa chipped away the tender resolve of mythology, striking with confidence until I was bare. I clung to the scraps of fairy tales that colored an otherwise mundane life until I held only dusty remains. Indulgence leads to ignorance and I had become a player in my own heart. Yet the child became quiet against the vast expanse of cornfields and rolling hills. I could no longer be so cavalier with my dark shadows. Fangs hid behind sorrow and thorns sprouted from despair. No longer could I advertise the growing beast that thrashed against the cage inside. No longer could I paint the clouds and laugh at the genius of my sadness. My nightmares crept into my reality and my genius became madness. I became fearful of my own mind, my own heart and grew quiet, waiting for the dawn, waiting for warmth in the chill of winter.
Words etch a course against the grave, smoothing the edges of its banks. Warmth teases the ground, pretending to be the sun as it prods life into the dirt. Like a child, it giggles to hear the sound and screams to incite a reaction. Yet the sky is still dark, speckled with ominous clouds, watching over the impetuous assertion of hope. Random collections of words pool together in vain belief it can describe the secrets it longs to hide. Yet it keeps trying.
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October 6, 2007 at 9:42 pm (Adjustment, Creative Writing, Depression, Disfunctional Family, Disillusion, Doubts, Failure, Fitting In, Great-Aunt, Helplessness, Human Experience, Leaving Home, New Life, Second-Guessing, Starting Over, The Fool, The Fool's Journey, Women, Writing)
Tags: Childhood friend, Disagreement, Growing Apart, Polar Opposites, Vulnerability
She was once vulnerable, fragile and compassionate. I was drawn to her broken glass and yet repelled by her open wounds. We were children once but never together. As close as we were, I was always watching from afar. I still am. As she rages in defeat and wallows in joy. I am confronted with a new woman. Released of her vulnerability, she is abrasive, willful and unchanging in her inconsistency. It is me who is broken glass and I can not help but get under her skin. I am wrong. And as not to forget that she has suffered more, that her opinions are truer, she reminds me. I am so stupid as to forget. So young and shallow. The world has never shown her face to me. I am her great disappointment, her freak.
What will the favored child do without a mother, without a home? Solace can not be found among strangers with knives. How pleased my great-aunt must be as she looks up from Hell. Not only do I see myself as a failure but now I have a friend who does the same.
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September 27, 2007 at 5:20 pm (Adjustment, Artistic Apathy, Creative Writing, Cynicism, Depression, Disillusion, Displacement, Doubts, Dreams, Emotions, Failure, Fear, Helplessness, Iowa, New Life, Personal Failure, Starting Over, Writing)
Tags: Charmed Life, Midwest, Unemployed, Writer's Block
Words jump from my pen, scampering to the edges of my page. They leap grandly to their deaths and I am, once again, defeated by their systematic suicide. I have entered into a foreign germ pool and have yet to be healthy since my arrival in the forsaken Midwest. Unemployed and dwindling, I wonder if I am cut out for mortal living. The world is so much easier inside my own head. The images of life are filtered through a rose-colored haze. I am celebrated, useful and blissful. And while my daydreams are manufactured by my own discontentment, it is still the most profound feeling of my existence. I dream to feel otherwise I am merely numb, a shell of writhing neurosis. I am disappointed with aspects of my life. I want to blame someone as if I am owed a charmed life and yet I do not pursue a life at all. Instead I pursue the escape.
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September 17, 2007 at 7:16 pm (Artistic Apathy, Breaking Habits, Children, Creative Writing, Devotion, Doubts, Dreams, Emotions, Failure, Faith, Family, Family Curse, Fear, Helplessness, Hope, Human Experience, Love, Motherhood, Parenthood, Personal Failure, Personal Responsibility, Reluctance, Single Motherhood, Son, Writing)
I’ve always wanted a partner in crime. Who knew he would be a curly-headed kindergartner? What people must think when they discover the closest relationship I have with another human being is with my own son? If I am to have a family curse of broken hearts, then my maternal instincts are my family’s blessing. The law of compensation…
I was close to my mother too and here I am, following her footsteps as I attempt to tear myself away. A single mother, chasing dreams from place to place. A talent hidden beneath excuses. She dreamed of Hollywood, of finding her name above the stars. The dream lay in waste and she placed the pieces in me. She believed I was special. She believed I was different. If I see a Child of the Gods in the mirror, she gave me the image to look upon. Her belief in me never faltered even when I ran away, when I dropped out of school and when I finally left home and became another teen mother. She saw nothing common in me. Looking upon the aura of greatness I was to have, I had, at times, wished her faith would falter, that I would become just a screw-up. Only then could I stop hating myself for falling. “What if I’m not really that smart?” I would say, “What if this is the best I can do?” The rest of the mortal world would easily buy these words but not my mother. No matter how many times I tried to disappoint her, I was her rebellious dream.
My own son lives under a mantle of high expectations. As he reads, I think, “How literate he will be!” As he tells me outlandish stories, I think, “What a great writer he will be!” He will tower over the rest of the mundane world yet possess the empathy to teach it a few new tricks. My eyes have become glazed over with stars. I cannot see the world the way it is. The truth is too hard, too plain. I want my son to be nothing like me. To cross from the world I create for him into a reality that will be much colder. Yet I find myself eager to follow, to be shown the way. But the excuses still call with its soft, luring song of freedom. It whispers of the charm of one who lives in their head. My own mother had these excuses too, these impulses to stay put, to play it safe. It lives like a vulture, feeding off the carrion of our dreams. What will my son say to me as he straddles both worlds, “Why do I have to be better when it’s so easy to fail?” The vultures lie in wait and I will be defenseless. I must show him the way instead.
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September 13, 2007 at 1:53 am (Adjustment, Creative Writing, Cynicism, Depression, Disillusion, Displacement, Doubts, Dreams, Emotions, Fitting In, Helplessness, Human Experience, Iowa, Leaving Home, Seattle, Second-Guessing, Starting Over, The Fool, The Fool's Journey, Writing)
I don’t know what I want but I do know what I don’t. The visions of my life were multi-faceted like the many faces of a jewel. From a nun to a spy, the pendulum rocked from the conservative ambition of white picket fences to revolutionary free love. I wanted to see the world; taste it and touch it. I wanted a home to fill with family until the day it would become my tomb. I wanted my life manifested as a Great American Novel. But as I sink further and further into “The Simple Life”, my illusions of a quaint country life are shattered. Each piece sings of another disappointment; racism, “inbred” ideas and resistance against the wheels of progress. What had I hoped to find? A soul mate? A calling? A cure? Instead I am reminded of my mistakes, each one wrapped around my neck. I suffocate in my sleep and my dreams are full of regret. One less identity to try on. One more “what if” crossed off my list. I ran so fast from a city that breathes. I thought I left what was a city of frauds and pretenders. But no, Seattle left the biggest fraud, the biggest pretender. I have lost her favor. My punishment is to endure, never to create. I live through live like stalking through mud. The ease of paths do not agree with my gypsy feet. Perhaps someday I will drive out of purgatory and find the sun on my back. But for now the road does not give in to me. The road does not give in to fools.
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